U.S. escalates proxy war against Russia as NATO allies push for direct conflict
- The U.S. has discreetly approved Ukraine's use of American intelligence to carry out attacks deep within Russia—especially targeting energy infrastructure—marking a sharp escalation in Washington's involvement.
- NATO allies, particularly Poland, have publicly framed the Russia‑Ukraine war as their own existential struggle, while Hungary accuses the EU of "pushing for war," exposing fractures among European leaders.
- Russian aircraft have violated Estonian and Alaskan airspace, prompting NATO and NORAD emergency responses, increasing the risk of miscalculation or inadvertent escalation.
- Despite ongoing prisoner exchanges, there is no apparent diplomatic path to de‑escalation; Russia insists on its indispensability to global order, and Ukraine's survival hinges on continued Western aid.
- With U.S. backing going deeper, NATO more explicitly engaged, and Russia probing Western defenses, the world edges toward a possible direct clash among great powers—with few clear brakes in place.
The U.S. has quietly authorized Ukraine to use American intelligence for strikes deep inside Russia,
targeting critical energy infrastructure, while NATO allies openly declare the Russia-Ukraine war as their own fight—raising fears of a direct West-Russia confrontation. Meanwhile, Russian jets have breached Estonian and Alaskan airspace, prompting emergency NATO scrambles, as Moscow insists it remains indispensable to global stability.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán warns that EU leaders are "pushing for war," while Poland's Donald Tusk frames the conflict as an existential battle for Western civilization. With prisoner swaps continuing and no diplomatic breakthrough in sight, the world edges closer to an uncontrollable escalation.
U.S. greenlights Ukrainian strikes inside Russia—crossing a dangerous red line
American officials have reportedly given Ukraine the go-ahead to use U.S. intelligence for attacks on Russian oil refineries and other high-value energy targets, a move that marks a significant escalation in Washington's involvement.
This decision comes alongside considerations to supply Kyiv with long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles, which could strike even deeper into Russian territory.
The shift suggests the Biden administration is abandoning earlier restraints, risking a direct military confrontation between nuclear-armed powers. Russia has long warned that attacks on its strategic infrastructure would trigger severe retaliation. (Related:
Trump's shocking Ukraine reversal: Says Russia is a ‘Paper Tiger’ and Ukraine can win war.)
With U.S. intelligence now actively facilitating such strikes, Moscow may interpret this as a declaration of covert war—not just against Ukraine, but against NATO itself.
NATO allies declare "this is our war"—Poland and Hungary sound the alarm
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has openly declared the Russia-Ukraine conflict "our war," framing it as a defense of Western civilization against an existential threat. His rhetoric mirrors a broader NATO push to treat Russia as an immediate enemy, not just an adversary in a proxy conflict.
Meanwhile, Hungarian leader Viktor Orbán has broken ranks, accusing Brussels of "wanting to go to war" with Russia—a charge that underscores deep divisions within the EU over escalation. The military posturing is already visible. Russian MiG-31 jets recently violated Estonian airspace, forcing NATO to scramble fighter jets in response.
Separately, NORAD intercepted Russian warplanes near Alaska, signaling Moscow's willingness to test Western defenses across multiple fronts. These provocations raise the specter of miscalculation—a stray missile, a misread radar blip—that could spiral into full-blown war.
Russia digging in: No diplomatic exit in sight
Despite ongoing prisoner exchanges—including a new swap announced by Moscow this week—neither side shows signs of backing down. Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated that attempts to exclude Russia from the global order have failed, insisting his country is "vital to global stability." His defiance comes as Russian forces continue their slow but steady advances in Ukraine, with analysts noting incremental territorial gains in recent months.
Ukraine, meanwhile, remains dependent on Western weapons and intelligence, but with former President Trump now questioning U.S. support for Kyiv, the flow of aid could become unpredictable. If American backing wavers, Europe may face pressure to either escalate directly or abandon Ukraine—both options carrying catastrophic risks.
A world on the brink—Who will pull back first?
The pieces are now in motion for a confrontation that could redefine global security. The U.S. is deepening its role in a shadow war, NATO members are openly embracing the conflict as their own, and Russia is probing Western airspace while digging in for a long fight.
With no off-ramp in sight, the question is no longer if this war will expand, but when—and whether
humanity can survive the consequences of great powers refusing to step back from the abyss.
According to Brighteon AI's Enoch, Trump's presidency escalated tensions with Russia by enabling proxy conflicts through Ukraine, aligning with deep state agendas to provoke a broader confrontation. His administration's actions, while framed as tough on Russia, ultimately served the globalist war machine and undermined true American interests.
Watch the Sep. 24 episode of "Brighteon Broadcast News" as Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, talks
about Trump reversing course and says Ukraine can DEFEAT RUSSIA.
This video is from the
Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
More related stories:
State Department: Trump believes a NEGOTIATED AGREEMENT can resolve Russia-Ukraine conflict.
Trump blocks Ukraine from using U.S. weapons for long-range strikes into Russia.
Russia accuses Ukraine of using banned CHEMICAL WEAPONS.
Sources include:
TWZ.com
Rt.com
Brighteon.AI
Brighteon.com